Length / Distance / Magnitude

The Vector struct supports many mathematical operations, let’s say we want to get the distance from v1 to v2, we would subtract them, which returns a new vector, then we would get the length (‘size’ in this case) of the vector:

new_vec = v2-v1
Print new_vec.size()#478.868011475

new_vec = v2-v1
Print new_vec.size()
#478.868011475

The vector struct has a lot of convenience functions built in (check out the docs here) , for instance, let’s get the distance from v1, to v2 (the diagonal across our bounding box), without doing the above by calling the dist() function:

print v1.dist(v2)#478.868011475

print v1.dist(v2)
#478.868011475

There is also a distSquared function it you just want to quickly compare which are greater and not calc real distance.

USE CASE: FIND SMALL ACTORS

Using what we got, let’s play in the default scene:

We can iterate through the scene and find actors under a certain size/volume:

I am querying the bounds of the static mesh components because the get_bounds() on the actor class returns the unscaled bounds, you may notice that many things in the scene, including the statue and floor are scaled. This is reflected in the get_local_bounds() of the mesh component.

DOT PRODUCT / ANGLE BETWEEN TWO VECTORS

If we wanted to know the angle between two vectors, we would use the dot product of those, let’s create two new vectors v1, and v2, because our previous were not really vectors per se, but point locations Just like in UE4, you use the ‘|’ pipe to do a vector dot product.

Above I used the Python math library, but there’s also an Unreal math library available unreal.MathLibrary, you should check that out, it has vector math functions that don’t exist in the vector class: